revisited
Honing His Craftbar
Gluttonous night owls that we are, we returned to one-year-old
craftbar recently to discover, with a tinge of disappointment, that
both the menu and the hours had shrunk (not unlike the typical season run of
an HBO hit series). But even though Tom Colicchio has taken to locking up an
hour earlier, at midnight, and his chef Marco Canora has streamlined an
opening menu that had ambitiously offered different pasta, fish, and meat
specials every day of the week, the open kitchen seems to have settled into
a delectable groove. Bacon-capped clams Cassino are as addictive as
Canora’s renowned stuffed sage leaves. The risotto balls are tastier
than ever, napped in a tangy tomato sauce. A deep bowl of ribollita,
drizzled with fruity oil and sprinkled with Parmesan, is the ultimate
cold-weather comfort food (next to the new rum-spiked hot chocolate with
homemade marshmallows). And someone must have heard our lactose-loving
prayers, since the selection of salumi has at long last been joined by a
well-edited assortment of cheese, from a tangy French goat to a nutty, runny
tuma de paja.
To work up a retail appetite for the line of exquisite
marinated vegetables Colicchio’s been importing from Calabria,
he’s cracked open some jars and serves their contents as the
craftkitchen vegetable antipasti, an arrangement of piquant caper flowers,
teensy wild artichokes, velvety grilled eggplant, flavor-packed peppers, and
a supersavory sun-dried-tomato-and-eggplant preserve. There might only be
six entrées to choose from now, like exceptionally light veal-ricotta
meatballs and a beautiful, simply roasted cod with salsa verde, but
they’re available nightly. Never again will life have to revolve
around Saturday’s spaghetti carbonara unless you want it to.
ROB PATRONITE
craftbar
47 East 19th Street
212-780-0880
object of desire
Hitting the Sauce
The applejack cobbler, the latest drink at Bemelmans Bar, almost
sounds like a tie-in to Gangs of New York. Cobblers were popular
throughout the nineteenth century, and New Jersey–made Lairds
applejack (also known as Jersey lightning) has been around since Colonial
times. Even George Washington was fond of the stuff. To give her new
concoction a modern twist, Bemelmans beverage director Audrey Saunders
begins by making her own cranberry sauce and muddling it with sliced orange,
pomegranate syrup, and bitters. “As much as I like cranberry juice,
the flavor’s a little thin,” she says. “The natural pectin
in the berries adds dimension and gives the drink a little oomph.” A
shake with Lairds, apple schnapps, and Punt è Mes and a red-currant
garnish complete the picture. The resulting sweet-tart-bitter flavors are so
lusciously well balanced, Mayor Bloomberg ought to give Saunders a crack at
the budget.
Bemelmans Bar
The Carlyle, Madison Avenue at 76th Street
212-744-1600
shopping
Sugar Bloom
When Kee Ling Tong was a graphic designer at Marsh & McLennan, she used to
work weekends in a florist’s shop -- for the therapeutic fun of it.
And even after she graduated from the French Culinary Institute and started
working as a pastry chef, she never lost her flower fetish. So it makes
sense that Chocolate Garden, the tiny boutique she opened on a quiet
Soho street six months ago, combines her passions for bouquets and bonbons,
which she makes in flavors like black-sesame, orange-confit, Key-lime, and
crème brûlée. At this point, truffles and retro sweets like
turtles and chocolate-dipped peppermint sticks outsell the flowers, but
imagine the one-stop-shopping possibilities come Valentine’s Day.
Chocolate Garden
80 Thompson Street
212-334-3284
happening
Morning Becomes Eclectic
After the excesses of New Year’s Eve, the 1st is usually relegated to
sleeping in, downing Excedrin like Tic Tacs, and mustering the strength for
bacon and eggs. But if one of your resolutions is to try new things, why not
start with breakfast? Taking a break from her usual Greenmarket-inspired
style, Patio Dining chef Sara Jenkins has come up with a New
Year’s Day menu that celebrates breakfasts around the world -- which
she won’t start serving until the civilized hour of 5 p.m. Choose from
pasta carbonara, menudo (Mexican tripe stew), Vietnamese pho, Maine (via
Scotland) finnan haddie, Tunisian brik, and Lebanese za’atar flatbread
with yogurt cheese and pickled turnips. If such culinary globetrotting makes
you queasy, Jenkins will happily serve up croissants and café au lait,
oatmeal with apples and walnuts -- even bacon and eggs with hash browns, and
everyone’s favorite hangover helper, the Bloody Mary.
Patio Dining
31 Second Avenue
212-460-9171
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